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Thread: Local Pawn Shop
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06-15-2014, 12:38 AM #1
- Join Date
- Nov 2012
- Location
- Across the street from Mickey Mouse in Calif.
- Posts
- 5,320
Thanked: 1185I ran into this countless times while searching for my first straight. You have to remember these people are selling old things to look at or use as decor. Some use e-bay as a price guide but only look at the highest price to compare. They know nothing of shave ready other than they are words used to describe the highest priced razors. They don't see our world and the amount of razors we see. To them it is one of a kind item and they got it. It looks pretty sitting on the shelf of a bathroom or in a cup with a brush next to it. At least they aren't being thrown away :<0)
Good judgment comes from experience, and experience....well that comes from poor judgment.
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06-15-2014, 12:57 AM #2
Always bothers me when they say " i sell a lot of these to woodcarvers" i can just see some woodcarver (nothing against woodcarvers, i do a little of that myself) taking a mint Wade and butcher and hacking it to pieces instead of using and old worn out unusable one.
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06-16-2014, 03:43 AM #3
- Join Date
- Apr 2014
- Location
- Southern MO
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- 215
Thanked: 31Yes, pawn shops and antique stores aren't the best places to find a good deal but every now and then you can stumble across one. Found a decent George W. at a nearby flea market and the gentleman wanted too much for it. I love the buying and selling game. We talked about it for a few then I made him an offer. He didn't want to sell it at my price that day so I gently inferred the more it rusted sitting in his shop the less it was worth. I returned each week to see how much more "it had rusted", after 3 weeks I got it for my price.
Buying and selling is a game of manipulation, most of the time the buyer has the advantage.
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06-21-2014, 05:08 AM #4
- Join Date
- Aug 2009
- Location
- New Port Richey, FL
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- 3,819
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- 3
Thanked: 1185Antique stores generally are pretty proud of their straight razors. I've seen rusty, chipped pieces of garbage that are 6/8's athe the heel and 2/8th at the toe, barely recongnizable as something that used to be a shaving implement with a $60 price tag on it. By contrast, Flea Market and Thrift Store people (when you're lucky) see straights as just trinkets and are content to pocket a couple bucks just to get rid of them (besides nobody actually shaves with these things anymore, right?)
Last edited by 1OldGI; 06-21-2014 at 05:10 AM.
The older I get, the better I was
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06-24-2014, 03:44 AM #5
- Join Date
- Jun 2014
- Location
- Eastern Washington State USA
- Posts
- 406
Thanked: 59I visited a antique store in a little town this weekend. They had about a dozen razors. This is the one that I came home with. I plan on shortening the blade to eliminate the chip and then replace the scales with shorter ones to match the blade. There were a few others that looked to be worth taking home as well, but I can always go back
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06-24-2014, 05:10 AM #6
- Join Date
- Feb 2013
- Location
- Haida Gwaii, British Columbia, Canada
- Posts
- 14,455
Thanked: 4830Unless there is a crack at that chip it looks like it will be way easier just to hone out the chip. If you were looking for a shorty candidate to start with I guess it is as good as any.
It's not what you know, it's who you take fishing!